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Convicted former Rep. Randy “Duke” Cunningham is continuing to plead his case from prison, sending a typewritten 10-page document to news organizations and others, including the judge who presided over his prosecution and the secretaries of the Air Force and Navy.

Cunningham, a Republican from Rancho Santa Fe, is serving a 100-month prison sentence in Tucson, Ariz., after pleading guilty in 2005 to conspiracy and tax evasion. Over the past several months in court filings, Cunningham has said he was pressured to plead guilty, did not accept bribes and accused prosecutors of misconduct.

He has also railed against the U.S. Internal Revenue Service for draining his life savings to pay off back taxes, interest and penalties on the approximately $2.1 million in bribes he admitted receiving from defense contractors.

He repeated those charges in an hour-long telephone interview with The San Diego Union-Tribune in November. He also said then he wanted to be an advocate for prison reform when he is released from prison in 2013.

Cunningham makes the same points in the document he recently mailed to such national news organizations as USA Today, the Los Angeles Times and Talking Points Memo, an online website. The alternative weekly San Diego CityBeat also received a copy. The Union-Tribune was not included in Cunningham’s mailing of what he calls a prison journal that he titled, “The Untold Story of Duke Cunningham.”

Cunningham sent a copy of the journal and a letter to U.S. District Judge Larry A. Burns, who presided over his case and sentenced him. Last month, Burns issued a ruling that “Cunningham simply isn’t believable” when he claims he was wronged by the judicial system.

Burns issued that ruling in a bid for a new trial filed by Brent Wilkes, a former Poway defense contractor who was convicted in 2007 of bribing Cunningham with gifts, trips, fancy meals and money.

The judge said Cunningham’s statements now that he was not bribed by Wilkes were contradicted by his plea agreement, statements he made at his sentencing hearing and statements he had made to lawyers.

In Cunningham’s letter to Burns, he notes that he knows the judge has been assigned to another high profile case — the prosecution of Jared Loughner for killing six people on Jan. 8 in Tucson, including a federal judge, and injuring Democratic Rep. Gabrielle Giffords of Arizona.